Big Chemical Encyclopedia

Chemical substances, components, reactions, process design ...

Articles Figures Tables About

Electroelastic model

The elasticity can be related to very different contributions to the energy of the interface. It includes classical and nonclassical (exchange, correlation) electrostatic interactions in ion-electron systems, entropic effects, Lennard-Jones and van der Waals-type interactions between solvent molecules and electrode, etc. Therefore, use of the macroscopic term should not hide its relation to microscopic reality. On the other hand, microscopic behavior could be much richer than the predictions of such simplified electroelastic models. Some of these differences will be discussed below. [Pg.71]

Electroelastic Models. Proof that Negative Capacitance is Admissible for Uniformly Charged Interface Models... [Pg.78]

Equation (55) illustrates the major shortcoming of the original electroelastic model it predicts membrane thirming of almost 40%, a result vastly different from the experimental... [Pg.82]

Spector, A. A. A nonlinear electroelastic model of the auditory outer hair cell, Int. J. Solids Struct., 38,2115,... [Pg.1060]

This chapter is devoted to the behavior of double layers and inclusion-free membranes. Section II treats two simple models, the elastic dimer and the elastic capacitor. They help to demonstrate the origin of electroelastic instabilities. Section III considers electrochemical interfaces. We discuss theoretical predictions of negative capacitance and how they may be related to reality. For this purpose we introduce three sorts of electrical control and show that this anomaly is most likely to arise in models which assume that the charge density on the electrode is uniform and can be controlled. This real applications only the total charge or the applied voltage can be fixed. We then show that predictions of C < 0 under a-control may indicate that in reality the symmetry breaks. Such interfaces undergo a transition to a nonuniform state the initial uniformity assumption is erroneous. Most... [Pg.66]

Book content is otganized in seven chapters and one Appendix. Chapter 1 is devoted to the fnndamental principles of piezoelectricity and its application including related histoiy of phenomenon discoveiy. A brief description of crystallography and tensor analysis needed for the piezoelectricity forms the content of Chap. 2. Covariant and contravariant formulation of tensor analysis is omitted in the new edition with respect to the old one. Chapter 3 is focused on the definition and basic properties of linear elastic properties of solids. Necessary thermodynamic description of piezoelectricity, definition of coupled field material coefficients and linear constitutive equations are discussed in Chap. 4. Piezoelectricity and its properties, tensor coefficients and their difierent possibilities, ferroelectricity, ferroics and physical models of it are given in Chap. 5. Chapter 6. is substantially enlarged in this new edition and it is focused especially on non-linear phenomena in electroelasticity. Chapter 7. has been also enlarged due to mary new materials and their properties which appeared since the last book edition in 1980. This chapter includes lot of helpful tables with the material data for the most today s applied materials. Finally, Appendix contains material tensor tables for the electromechanical coefficients listed in matrix form for reader s easy use and convenience. [Pg.214]

With the preceding constitutive modeling, the associated electroelastic energy density ZYo, see Eq. (3.65), may now be given for adaptive laminated shells as... [Pg.109]

The effective use of dielectric elastomers (DE) in actual transducers requires the definition of rehable design tools which correctly predict their electromechanical behavior. In this chapter, we present two different approaches for modeling DE. The first approach is focussed on describing the electroelastic behavior of DEs in the framework of finite-strain electromechanics. The second approach,... [Pg.715]


See other pages where Electroelastic model is mentioned: [Pg.66]    [Pg.67]    [Pg.51]    [Pg.52]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.67 ]




SEARCH



© 2024 chempedia.info